Search results for "Material implication"

showing 1 items of 1 documents

Our Thoughts and Their Objects

2015

This chapter is about how we as adults use language to represent these qualified things. I first show that the objects of our true thoughts are what Chrysippus called obtaining propositions, which is what we now call facts. Then I look at four kinds of thought and the kinds of fact they represent. I start with two kinds of thought that are unique in that they are guaranteed to be true, according to Chrysippus, namely sense perceptions and preconceptions. I argue that sense perceptions represent so-called simple facts and that all conceptions represent the sort of non-simple facts that can be captured in conditionals. I then look at two kinds of thought that are indispensable when we engage …

Theory of FormsPhilosophyPerceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectSign (semiotics)sortMaterial implicationThe ImaginarySimple (philosophy)Epistemologymedia_common
researchProduct